One Hundred One Famous Poems: With a Prose Supplement

by Roy J. Cook (Editor)

Hardcover, 1958

Status

Available

Call number

821.008

Collection

Publication

Henry Regnery Co (1958), Edition: First Thus, Hardcover, 186 pages

Description

Fully indexed by title, author, and first line, this much-loved collection, in print since 1916, is a wide-ranging collection of the best-known English language poets, from William Shakespeare Robert Frost, from Percy Bysshe Shelley to Edna St. Vincent Millay.

User reviews

LibraryThing member Bestine
As a hack writer, I've found this little volume incredibly useful as a quick reference.
LibraryThing member JWeatherly8
Excellent collection of cherished poems! This one is an "American Standard."
LibraryThing member seoulful
A lovely book of poems reflecting the appreciation of the poetry reading public of 1924 America. This book was given to my mother by a close friend, a practice which is also indicative of those times when a book of poetry was considered a welcomed gift. Many of the poems extol nature, others speak
Show More
in the aftermath of WWI on the sadness of loss of young life, others reflect on the brevity and meaning of life in general and others are happy, wistful celebrations of childhood. Reading the book through, you come repeatedly across famous lines that have made their way into the cultural fabric of the English language. Two examples are: From Milton's Sonnet on His Blindness, "They also serve who only stand and wait." or from Thomas Gray's Elegy Written in a Country Church-Yard, "The paths of glory lead but to the grave." It is with nostalgia that we consider the values and standards expressed in these poems of bygone ages.
Show Less
LibraryThing member srtrent
In the face of all the famous poems out there, 101 poems isn't a whole lot. However, this is a great little book to stick in your pocket or bag for those moments when you find yourself waiting for someone or something...the bus, the doctor's office...
LibraryThing member VirginiaGill
I chose this book for one reason only. It gave me the ability to have many of both my husband's and my favorite poems in one place. Better yet it was available as an e-book! So now I have the comfort of poetry everywhere I go. As I read to my husband several weeks ago at the cancer center it was
Show More
neat to have other patients and staff stopping in to listen and enjoy the poems as well. That moment has made this a cherished possession.
Show Less
LibraryThing member kylljoi
My mother and grandmother used to read poems from this collection to me when I was a child.
LibraryThing member devenish
This does truly contains most of my favourite poems. It has 'Charge of the Light Brigade' (Tennyson),'Trees' (Kilmer),'Recessional' & 'If' (Kipling),'Song of the Shirt (Hood).'Mercy' & 'Soliquy from Hamlet'(Shakespeare),'Abou Ben Adhem' (Leigh Hunt),'The Bells' & 'The Raven' (Poe),'Sea
Show More
Fever'(Masefield),'The Highwayman' (Noyes),'The Spider and the Fly' (Howitt) and many others.
A nice handy size and shape to slip into the pocket too.
On a personal note,this is one of the books which has been in my possession the longest. It is also a bit of a mystery as somewhere along the line it has lost its introduction (does begin at the first poem as luck would have it) It has also lost page 59-60,so if anyone out there can help with either of the missing page information I would be most obliged.
Show Less
LibraryThing member carterchristian1
There is an inscription in this frojmj 1944, my first summer at camp in North Carloina, Camp Carlyle. It was an award. I loved the poems. especially The Highwayman and Trees. Truly favorites
LibraryThing member datrappert
I grew up with this book in the house and have turned to it countless times over the years. Merely by inclusion in this book, a poem became an automatic classic to me. The selection is varied and enjoyable. Although looking at the paperback versions I see pictured in "Popular Covers", it just
Show More
doesn't seem quite the same as the vintage version I have.
Show Less
LibraryThing member Murphy-Jacobs
I have this book in two editions -- one dating from the early 20th century and another from the 1990s. The earlier one has been read more. There's a certain thrill to read a poem with a little inset portrait of the poet above it, and the poet's dates of birth and death under the picture -- only the
Show More
date of death is not yet filled in because the poet was alive when the book was published.
Show Less
LibraryThing member bdtrump
Some solid entries, and others that are not widely distributed anymore. On the other hand, some entries that seem forced or don't need to be here.

I did like the prose supplement, even if it isn't completely topical.

A worthwhile venture into basic poetry for anyone.
LibraryThing member dbsovereign
A rather pedestrian collection that nevertheless delivers just because it is poetry and poetry always transcends its own boundaries...a gift of the free box on the corner, and it arrived at just the right page in my life...

Language

Original publication date

1916

ISBN

none
Page: 0.3942 seconds